Cancer risk slightly higher in IVF kids: study

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Children and young adults who were conceived by in vitro fertilization (IVF) have a slightly increased risk of developing cancer, relative to those conceived naturally, researchers from Sweden reported Monday in the journal Pediatrics.

They emphasize, however, that this is probably not due to the IVF procedure itself, but rather to a variety of other factors, including the tendency for IVF babies to be born prematurely and to have respiratory problems at birth.

The researchers also stress that the individual risk of cancer for a child born via IVF is very low.

While the absolute risk cannot be exactly calculated from the available data, Dr. Bengt Kallen of the University of Lund noted in an email to Reuters Health: "The total risk for a childhood cancer may be around 2 per 1,000 children (probably a little less) and the risk after IVF is 3 per 1,000 - still a very low individual risk."

This level of risk, Kallen said, should not affect the decision of a couple considering IVF.

In vitro fertilization, the most technologically advanced of assisted reproductive technologies, involves removing an egg cell from a woman's body, fertilizing it in the lab, and placing it in the woman's womb. It can cost up to $15,000 per "cycle" of medications and procedures, with successful pregnancies often requiring several cycles.

Studies of cancer in IVF children have failed to show a clear-cut increase in risk, but most studies were too small to answer the question, Kallen and colleagues note in their report.

In an earlier study of 16,280 Swedish children born after IVF during a follow-up period of 1 to 20 years, Kallen's team noted a suggestion of a higher risk of cancer in IVF kids; 8 more children developed cancer than would be expected in the general population (29 cases vs 21 expected). The difference, however, may have been due to chance.
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